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Do You Support the Troops?

Tony said:
Another No. Life is too precious and finite to worry about "duty".

Is life also too precious and finite to worry about "freedom", Tony?
 
Tony said:

Do you support the troops? Or is your support only conditional if they act in ways with which you agree?


You tell me.

Do you support the actions/motivations of Sargeant Asan Akbar, when he threw the grenade in the tent, killing one and wounding fifteen?
 
Skeptic said:
(snort) Sure--as long as there are all those OTHER suckers who worry about it so you don't have to.

To quote Epictetus, "The brave man is called a fool--by the coward."

Yes we know, you always jump at the opportunity to make yourself look stupid.
 
The best advice ends up being "Don't enlist if you're not prepared to fight."

You have every right to be against a war, but signing up for military service pretty much means you have given away your right to decide whether you want to participate in a war or not. You can argue this is unfair, but it's the way it works.

Now, I realize a lot of people enlist as a way to make money and further their education and don't grasp the reality that they may end up in a combat zone. But, geez, it's the military! Conflict and war are a staple of the military.
 
Tony said:
Yes we know, you always jump at the opportunity to make yourself look stupid.
Thanks for backing his point.

(PS: "freedom is the opposite of duty" does not exactly prove your brilliance)
 
KelvinG said:
The best advice ends up being "Don't enlist if you're not prepared to fight."

You have every right to be against a war, but signing up for military service pretty much means you have given away your right to decide whether you want to participate in a war or not. You can argue this is unfair, but it's the way it works.

Now, I realize a lot of people enlist as a way to make money and further their education and don't grasp the reality that they may end up in a combat zone. But, geez, it's the military! Conflict and war are a staple of the military.

And here is the big tie-in between duty and freedom. All US servicemen freely volunteer to join the Armed Forces, and once trained soldiers, have a sworn duty to follow orders, even if those orders result in the loss of one's own life.
 
Tony said:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1029874-1,00.html ...full article



Do you support the troops? Or is your support only conditional if they act in ways with which you agree?


-------------------------------------------------------------------

How to Construct a Dishonest Argument:

Step 1- Atttach your argument to an American
Icon: "the troops", the clergy, Old Glory,
baseball, hot dogs, apple pie. Make sure
it is short, if it rhymes or is funny
all the better.

Step 2- Use constant repetition in order to
form a line of thought that automatically
leads to your argument when the icon is
mentioned. Spread it among the target
demographic using the network of peer
relationships (word of mouth), making
sure those who are seen as trendsetters
or "leaders" are observed by others as
having adopted your argument. People will
aquiesce to your argument mostly due to
peer pressure, not because your argument
has merit.



The "Do you support the troops" question is in fact
a masterpiece of sales technique in which two
concepts:

1) Supporting the American Military establishment
2) Supporting my viewpoint on Middle East Politics

are so tightly linked as to be indistingushible.
The next time someone asks you this question,
your response should *NOT* be yes or no.
You should say:

"I Support the Troops Leaving Iraq"
or
"I Suppport the Troops being in the
right battle and not the wrong one
like they are in now."

It's not what you say-It's how you say it!
 
Upchurch said:
It is a fine line, but what in this world is ever a black and white issue?

I would submit that the difference between a freely elected government and a tyranny is a black/white, good/evil kind of non-gray dichtomy. Slavery and freedom is another example...but then that's really the same thing isn't it?

Moral clarity cuts the gray....but if you don't have it the gray creeps into your entire world view. Next thing you know you find yourself a confused participant at a A.N.S.W.E.R. rally.

-z
 
1_shoot_officers.jpg


From this lovely site.
 
BPSCG said:
From this lovely site.

"infoshop.org, your online anarchist community" Oh goody.

LOL @ "we welcome all military...." Earth to rocket scientists: I think I can safely say that the majority of the military would be quite happy to ship you off to a mountain range in Iraq.
 
Actually, that site does have some entertainment value, when you get down to it.

For example, gotta love this one:

"After a war, a hero is just a man with one leg." —Anonymous


Did I say "the majority" of the military? Make that "nearly all."
 
"After a war, a hero is just a man with one leg."

These guys just keep proving Epictetus was correct.
 
http://orangecow.org/pythonet/sketches/racket.htm

(Stock film of the amy. Tanks rolling, troops moving forward etc. Stirring military music.)
Voice Over: In 1943, a group of British Army Officers working deep behind enemy lines, carried out one of the most dangerous and heroic raids in the history of warfare. But that's as maybe. And now . . .

(Superimposed Caption on Screen : 'AND NOW . . . UNOCCUPIED BRITAIN 1970' Cut to colonel's office. Colonel is seated at desk.)
Colonel: Come in, what do you want?
(Private Watkins enters and salutes.)
Watkins: I'd like to leave the army please, sir.
Colonel: Good heavens man, why?
Watkins: It's dangerous.
Colonel: What?
Watkins: There are people with guns out there, sir.
Colonel: What?
Watkins: Real guns, sir. Not toy ones, sir. Proper ones, sir. They've all got 'em. All of 'em, sir. And some of 'em have got tanks.
Colonel: Watkins, they are on our side.
Watkins: And grenades, sir. And machine guns, sir. So I'd like to leave, sir, before I get killed, please.
Colonel: Watkins, you've only been in the army a day.
Watkins: I know sir but people get killed, properly dead, sir, no barley cross fingers, sir. A bloke was telling me, if you're in the army and there's a war you have to go and fight.
Colonel: That's true.
Watkins: Well I mean, blimey, I mean if it was a big war somebody could be hurt.
Colonel: Watkins why did you join the army?
Watkins: For the water-skiing and for the travel, sir. And not for the killing, sir. I asked them to put it on my form, sir - no killing.
Colonel: Watkins are you a pacifist?
Watkins: No sir, l'm not a pacifist, sir. I'm a coward.
Colonel: That's a very silly line. Sit down.
Watkins: Yes sir. Silly, sir. (sits in corner)
Colonel: Awfully bad.

(from Monty Python's Flying Circus, army protection racket sketch)
----

All kidding aside, if you hear some of the deserters' stories, for some of them one might say, "no wonder they took off"... but personally I don't agree with it. I feel once you've given your oath, you're morally obligated to remain and obey orders unless given an unlawful order, or to follow proper procedures for discharge.

Now, what if we shake that up a bit, and ask, are you morally bound to keep an oath if it was obtained on false pretenses? Some of these deserters were lied to in order to convince them to enlist (according to them).

I also do not believe all deserters are cowards. Some may do so on principle, and some may say they are, but have their own protection in mind. Some may not even know which they are. Can anyone, even the person doing it, make an objective assessment?
 
Skeptic said:
"After a war, a hero is just a man with one leg."

These guys just keep proving Epictetus was correct.

Quite a few of us have not read as much Greek philosophy as you have.

In what way was Epictetus correct?
 
Mycroft said:
Quite a few of us have not read as much Greek philosophy as you have.

In what way was Epictetus correct?

I quoted him earlier in the thread: "The brave man is called stupid by the coward".
 
Skeptic said:
I quoted him earlier in the thread: "The brave man is called stupid by the coward".

Thank you. I missed the previous reference. :)
 

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